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Androgen Receptor Phosphorylation at Serine 308 and Serine 791 Predicts Enhanced Survival in Castrate Resistant Prostate Cancer Patients

We previously reported that AR phosphorylation at serine 213 was associated with poor outcome and may contribute to prostate cancer development and progression. This study investigates if specific AR phosphorylation sites have differing roles in the progression of hormone naïve prostate cancer (HNPC...

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Autores principales: McCall, Pamela, Adams, Claire E., Willder, Jennifer M., Bennett, Lindsay, Qayyum, Tahir, Orange, Clare, Underwood, Mark A., Edwards, Joanne
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3759930/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23945560
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms140816656
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author McCall, Pamela
Adams, Claire E.
Willder, Jennifer M.
Bennett, Lindsay
Qayyum, Tahir
Orange, Clare
Underwood, Mark A.
Edwards, Joanne
author_facet McCall, Pamela
Adams, Claire E.
Willder, Jennifer M.
Bennett, Lindsay
Qayyum, Tahir
Orange, Clare
Underwood, Mark A.
Edwards, Joanne
author_sort McCall, Pamela
collection PubMed
description We previously reported that AR phosphorylation at serine 213 was associated with poor outcome and may contribute to prostate cancer development and progression. This study investigates if specific AR phosphorylation sites have differing roles in the progression of hormone naïve prostate cancer (HNPC) to castrate resistant disease (CRPC). A panel of phosphospecific antibodies were employed to study AR phosphorylation in 84 matched HNPC and CRPC tumours. Immunohistochemistry measured Androgen receptor expression phosphorylated at serine residues 94 (pAR(94)), 308 (pAR(308)), 650(pAR(650)) and 791 (pAR(791)). No correlations with clinical parameters were observed for pAR(94) or pAR(650) in HNPC or CRPC tumours. In contrast to our previous observation with serine 213, high pAR(308) is significantly associated with a longer time to disease specific death (p = 0.011) and high pAR(791) expression significantly associated with a longer time to disease recurrence (p = 0.018) in HNPC tumours and longer time to death from disease recurrence (p = 0.040) in CRPC tumours. This observation in CRPC tumours was attenuated in high apoptotic tumours (p = 0.022) and low proliferating tumours (p = 0.004). These results demonstrate that understanding the differing roles of AR phosphorylation is necessary before this can be exploited as a target for castrate resistant prostate cancer.
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spelling pubmed-37599302013-09-03 Androgen Receptor Phosphorylation at Serine 308 and Serine 791 Predicts Enhanced Survival in Castrate Resistant Prostate Cancer Patients McCall, Pamela Adams, Claire E. Willder, Jennifer M. Bennett, Lindsay Qayyum, Tahir Orange, Clare Underwood, Mark A. Edwards, Joanne Int J Mol Sci Article We previously reported that AR phosphorylation at serine 213 was associated with poor outcome and may contribute to prostate cancer development and progression. This study investigates if specific AR phosphorylation sites have differing roles in the progression of hormone naïve prostate cancer (HNPC) to castrate resistant disease (CRPC). A panel of phosphospecific antibodies were employed to study AR phosphorylation in 84 matched HNPC and CRPC tumours. Immunohistochemistry measured Androgen receptor expression phosphorylated at serine residues 94 (pAR(94)), 308 (pAR(308)), 650(pAR(650)) and 791 (pAR(791)). No correlations with clinical parameters were observed for pAR(94) or pAR(650) in HNPC or CRPC tumours. In contrast to our previous observation with serine 213, high pAR(308) is significantly associated with a longer time to disease specific death (p = 0.011) and high pAR(791) expression significantly associated with a longer time to disease recurrence (p = 0.018) in HNPC tumours and longer time to death from disease recurrence (p = 0.040) in CRPC tumours. This observation in CRPC tumours was attenuated in high apoptotic tumours (p = 0.022) and low proliferating tumours (p = 0.004). These results demonstrate that understanding the differing roles of AR phosphorylation is necessary before this can be exploited as a target for castrate resistant prostate cancer. MDPI 2013-08-13 /pmc/articles/PMC3759930/ /pubmed/23945560 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms140816656 Text en © 2013 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0 This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).
spellingShingle Article
McCall, Pamela
Adams, Claire E.
Willder, Jennifer M.
Bennett, Lindsay
Qayyum, Tahir
Orange, Clare
Underwood, Mark A.
Edwards, Joanne
Androgen Receptor Phosphorylation at Serine 308 and Serine 791 Predicts Enhanced Survival in Castrate Resistant Prostate Cancer Patients
title Androgen Receptor Phosphorylation at Serine 308 and Serine 791 Predicts Enhanced Survival in Castrate Resistant Prostate Cancer Patients
title_full Androgen Receptor Phosphorylation at Serine 308 and Serine 791 Predicts Enhanced Survival in Castrate Resistant Prostate Cancer Patients
title_fullStr Androgen Receptor Phosphorylation at Serine 308 and Serine 791 Predicts Enhanced Survival in Castrate Resistant Prostate Cancer Patients
title_full_unstemmed Androgen Receptor Phosphorylation at Serine 308 and Serine 791 Predicts Enhanced Survival in Castrate Resistant Prostate Cancer Patients
title_short Androgen Receptor Phosphorylation at Serine 308 and Serine 791 Predicts Enhanced Survival in Castrate Resistant Prostate Cancer Patients
title_sort androgen receptor phosphorylation at serine 308 and serine 791 predicts enhanced survival in castrate resistant prostate cancer patients
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3759930/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23945560
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms140816656
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